Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / Sept. 19, 1963, edition 1 / Page 8
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Duplin Times I ^^BfUALS DUPlm THURSDA^'sEPTEMBER 19,MWl ~ ?i">. ? Wi 4>W i ??? >? ? ? ' * ? -? - ? ~ - - I1M tV ^HhuWiandSalefyHps ^ From | Th? American Medical Association Itryone does now and I way from a dun. un pfcMa Iridt soft beds, Rttd tki alter comforts civilisation with an in be number of (MfWiu pain, NM? IWfcd AsSPChe H?inga, tort puin is I , ly pwi pOmWrffi Uv hf of irtWApMtfiaU ra. w ... ' PMRy RXV. UTrTSirfn PpwtWpdtfe la apart*. | be due t? disease not fa* to rta back ?r U pain mat McM at My Mtbs to totter Middle M (MM. ft OOMft id lid in aH fMM, arid U Ml Widl people wife M squires stooping or Hfl Drta^ead, MouwEm wMbestraiWWS ByikJM m/A^ja iteM aim uu pnBICf win straight A soft saggy bed and low, soft chain contribute to backache. Chairs, ideally, should ha firm, stra nlght and have the contour of a nor mal back. A low heeled shoe is best for Standing or walking- High-heeled shifts fetid <? the posture dft MfaMc# and HWNb* strain oh the lnniae Kaak T l^llnl JjrdiiM h lUWcil UuvA. 1.X7T1Tvi o, HQuvl ^ilj/pvl o and wit afters aMo Mdy lead tobecb aini rf turn rdiwitrlj * MHhg beefy 0bjedts, keep Ae fcMek' Strtfgtft MM M With knees aid Aigb rttascles, rather Ana behdMg ffter and Mfattitig the agkkoi-'".' Like mtfty other aliments, bank aislta ft. a. ? . m,. a KHf Hray DC BgpBVBtPu 07 WHO* ftstlal tta*M ?r aittiet?. Treatment of backache varies wwi the eawe. When it's due t* Strain, iMttdiy rest, heat and a paia reliefer WW help. Massage, used M-. 1 A luvia MUAWA nwWTmWI, Iray IKlp rCnfTt discomfort. Your doctor may also the muscled of the buck and to iib Backache is a common aSmeht Mtong AmeriCM^H your^baek ST"* ?pro* am says pHc must be concerned between the pto biW ifoveffl- I PbVi oo the other hand. I gnark CMe of Ex Parte I R*u?git ?h pmtea I ?geat constitutional law- I BP "? Wbft, stdt-1 rAmerican Constitution I Mm* of "Mven centur- I y^beheewi^be people I iiace? legislative pro- I |g continuously empha- I MPbPt. There is, there- I f*s recall that the Eng. I WSftPSf I Jh a recurrence of that I H^i Url ysblfoir I tfol security record pes- I J7 Have you gotten ? tecsisfflB T*t^ by your employ- I Hfr?laat. are you con- B the futurt +efi Mng ot M 1 You are probably un- I for certain that your B mi is oorret* 4r Oat B Me JSLW$V I .are interested greaU$ I weUbeiit?4f ytait-fctm- I itWeroent to social sec- I V * J- *?- ? A '? ? 1 ? hitu iiituuui 10 connuci infir diisi iNss iftd occupation in accordance with their own best judgments. It W herd that tie life Ovfl right* proposals encounter serlpus consti tutional and human difficulties. In MMMice, the civil rights measure seeks to supplant the judgment of individuals at local and business levels *tn the judgment of M known man in Washington. Con gress MM the people in ttamlaWg the bill should find that this loss of liberty carries the very high price of governmental dictation over a Iff wide area of Milan affairs. APPROPRIATIONS - - Congress re ceived some reaMhfing ne#S last week in a IS minute speech by House Appfttprtfifotts Committee oieaiec nu me appi ujji laCMira trend appears to be toward lower btmons at this session. He pointed out that caution exercised on appro priation bills can work both ways. Ml fltft tin pear wiflb the lMt fta ehl ftat months eld it appears to fed M the file of economy. "The Chairman Wtfwluilll: "It seems reidOMMfe, as dRM, to venture the suggestiMI that in this session, Mr the first time In sonie years, t&i regular appropriation bills, Wttere hot all but in any event most of the pending mrtMi Itj ia annuMly provided, May aggregate less tnafi test peat. that in itself ia tEfc f^HUIIil'i IrflilttWISfci I, I-A lire uioiiluflB s preaiciion may teulIiiMih ifei^i IL ? niMaatl u Ia Ifinnti lnuitHie inan ure touniy is oeiom log itMK interested in fiscal re spMtftrtlfty oft the Baft of the Fed J* ut I lintel dtUlAU f Ln.. * ern gOTmlHIrni wniCn I naTC long urfty benefits la based an personal earnings record. AIM, the exact a MMtA you and JroUr family will re ilMlill lla " - -/ -Ml..., Ccivc in lire cflM w an emergency is based directly upon this same earn ings record. In essence, if you and ytiir family Pre to rSfcetVe mSxl dlurri jtnotettiOfl under tile Sotial Security set, your fwtbrd must be maintained correctly. Too, you have pad taxes on your hard earned - ? - * ' ill yg wagB ana snouta iimivc creaii ior these payments. So, as you eta See, it is extremely important to every family that all earnings are report ed ddthotit erfdr. The SotM Sefcdrity Adtbinlsird tion works diligently to keep the earnings record of each lhfliVldthfl complete dud accurate We also En deavor to correct errors when we dLMdVCf thettl Ot tftey art called tb our attention. However, due to the tremeniiut VMtttfan* H dctount* cofffft NCOrdi, ApecUt^f yMt own personal account by making sure you give your employer your correal social security nimber. Y#u should provide your employer with you socill security card each time you change jobs or when you begin working For the first time. We cred it your account accoittf to podf number and your name when your employer's report Is received. It is most important that you acquire only on* social sMMP number and use MQr that number in sill of your employment If there ie a change in Mtf name, tbsn yon should secure a card used to change your name in our records from yeut nearest Social Security Office. This will Slier dU feeefds to show cur rent information on your name and account. naturally, this would apply tndafiy to newly married women At fhia point, you ate probably asking, "bow Can I check my record to see if alf of my earnings have been tur ned In correctly?" The answer is simple and very easy for you. Just contact your Social Security District Office and ask for the postcard Form OAR-1M4. If yon cannot re member the form number, just ask for the preaddressed card to check your earnings. The card win be mailed to your promptly. When you receive (he card, fill it out com pletely and moil it. Within a short period of tithe you will receive a statement of your earnings. You shuold compare the earnings posted to your record With your own per sonal records. If there ate any ir fegularifie sor errors, your should contact us immediately to enable corrective action as soon as possi ble. We urge each and every one af you to contact as immediately and get a Card to check your earnings. Now is the time to make sure you are getting wen deserved credit for your earnings. Make sare that yotr earnings are correct. If ydti wish futher information on cheeking your account or any mat ter pertaining to social security, contact yott (Social Security District Office at 311 East Walnut Street fa Goldsboro. w D. E. EARNHARDT fefcrt Ul? fee Ike j#y. ft i.'.TZ My neighbor's Bttle three year M Peggie cane into our kitchen look ing for my wife and found me Wash ing the dishes. She went away cry ing thinking that my wife was dead If the average layman was caught holding prayer meeting the whole town would think that the preacher was dead. Why bother when the aburch is getting along? Cotton seeds bring cent apiece aftd tobacco Is five cents a chaw "We sky we are rich and have need of nothing and know not that we ate poor and blind and naked." When the busy church turns back to its business and the joy of the Lord is restored to the sanctuary, then tile laymen will have a testi mony and sinners will be conver ted. Cliniilii Ujinaw liaiiii ?nraiM nemorrnoios Mittisiit Sarfsry Stoos Itch?Relieves Pain kywVIPw IwVII ?WWwWWWrwwWw a mess i iM tonishing ability to (brink hemor rhoids and to relievo pain - without U? (aklink.fe) toek put.. Most tsr^sif.!a?"'farUB3 trriis institute. This substance is now SVah SSSWSB8SI??n??8 .ii<. tiiainon r it - ? - "practising HMxeutr wrmnxr A LICENSE!" Ww:* .v ? ,. .. .vr:&? ;? Uncle Pete From Chitffin Switch SAYS ~ V ?-? i*>. . * . ? divi DEAR MfirtttK EDlTOB: t was reading a piece In the pap eri Where one of them Wall Street experts was advising folks te "betid a sec and raeeme." tie was claiming the national economy Was gitttng to the place where one was n't enough. Thi* feller must have got lest crossing the New Frontier because we been ia that fix fer a leng time now. It got started back during the second World War when Sadie took a job on the swing shift to help out on the war effort, when the war was over, prices got so high that Sadie had to stay on the swing shift to help her aid men make both ends meet. Fer instant, I saw some giffers the other day where six married winunen out of ever 100 was hold ing down jabs in 1MO and new 88 out of ever 100 was working full time helping with the family ex pensos, and they Waa predicting that ia another w year about three fourths of all married wimmen in the nation would be coming home with a payroll check. Farthermere, it ain't only the whmntn hits that is wortdhg en this "second tneorm" project. I was ** reading a {face from the U. S. La bor Department that announced they was 3 million men in thin country holding down none full time aether 75,000 waa heMiag dawn two full time jobs, working > bourse on one and doing another 8 hours somewhere else. I was raised Up in the old school. Mister Editor, when a woman's place waa in the home, as the old saying goes, hut With the takpdyers, trying to keep up the interest on a 3300 billion debt, old fashioned field tomatoes costing 35 cent a pound, and a pair ef $2 shoes costing $18, most wimmen staying in the home ain't going to have no home very long. This "second income' is a way of life that's beerl sneaking up on this generation of Americans and ain't had much publicity, but it is coming full bloom and this feller from WaU Street is way behind the times. Incidental, this new "equal pay" fer wimmen law the Congress pas sed is liable to fbfce more men Into the two-Job column. I was reading where one big manufacturer claim ed it cost 3b per cent more to hire wimmen than men, on account of ... f a wimmen being absent so much and on account of the constant turn over in wimmen employees. He al lowed us how his firm was cutting way down on hiring wimmen and senj*^ to me. Mister ?"?i i? tee on Un-Americanism or Ktiepun. V*T52K kL > I '? W: i ? st; ? bible facts ? "? of mraibi BTi Kite V. l*Mg?l The Gospel Story - "The Greatest Story Ever Told" The etenr tt the eomlhg of Jews to live among men and show to the world what God Id tike, to savtt iheii from their sis, aftd inher defeat and to impart new life through faith. "So it is?" and the story it got ended for Jesus Christ is Ait! work ing among men today. The New Testament is concerned with part of this endless story Which deals with the early life of Jesua and the coming of his spirit to establish the Christian community and send Ms followers out as flam ing witnesses of their faith. The story does not begin with the birth of Jesus in the Bethlehem stable. It begins back in the Old Testament in Gods Covenant with his people in their quest for him, la the collapse of their national secur ity, In Gods' promise that a rem nant of the faithful will SUfVtve and W them a Deliverer will come. liest of the Jews were looking a Messiah who would restore their national greatness and sit again on the throne of DavW-othert were leaking tor a Messiah as described to Daniel and the Apocdytfc books who weald descend from Heaven to Judge Hie earth. They were hot look ing for a eavtor who would be born as h baby id a manager, grow tip in a poor man's borne, becoihe a wandering preacher add finally die en a Cross, hot the Ways of God are wiser then the expectation of nun. Jesus was born while Herod the Greet was king and ahtoe Herod died to f to. C., Jesus was probably born between 8 and 4 B. C. No one knows the day of the year, but since the fourth century, December SBth is eettftoatod to the DiKtira Clet as the winter solstice and the suit's birthday hag been observed by the : Christian church. We are told nothing of Jesus' childhood or youth expect for the one vivid story of his visit to the temple in Jerusalem at Ate age of twelve, but siaee Mary and Joseph were devout Jews, ?KM Je-tlis quot ed so^ofteri fttnt tW? Old Testa Jesus' life would be of greaPbiter est. The Gospel writers were gripped only by the amazing events of Jes us' ministry, death and resurrection appearances, and neglected Jesus Boyhood story. Continued next week "Its of the Gospel Story. I , . ? . I Civil tavice The Board of U. S. CM! hi^fcf Examiners for the Internal (MM Service, Atlanta, Georgia, auasun ics today that M will begin accep ting applications from accountants and senior college accounting stud ents f?r'.. internal Revenue Agent trainee positions at grades CS-f and OS-? paying annual Salaries of The lists of eligible* established well in advance 01 Hurt flme fo# conMuration. I PFMore deteMi ntsp to tod fW* ?* Internal RevUMO ferric* Ml bf Examiners, dM Serviee itfcr mation desks IocMm at MSB? nkt Offices. NKEO STATION BR Y J INvMMIr BURINRRP FMMS RUNTOH Olll QUALITY M* PRIM IIIW CMS ON* DUPLIN - TIMES! Sam's Drug Store, . ? jJ? I r ;r: I E&#* " Rose Hill, fc C. ) un JLJJtHg: I* ? - ? [?*>.* ?mA Serving Eastern Carolina communities since 1926 ^ I ^^^WACCAMAW BANK & TRUST CO. I locations j Banking at WACCAMAW gives you Hie satisfoc- I tion of knowing you have the STRONGEST bank I in the area serving yoii. Make deposits at any I of our many locations for credit to your home j ' WACCAMAW bank. I Money you en't afford to lose belongs in a 1 WACCAMAW CHECKING ACCOUNT I QJouVe gM tt made when go#'w got ?t Saved I I THE DUPLIN TIMES ? " ft '? ?l?1 'i nfis.-jfygrjy*; Published each Thursday iq Ketiansvllle, N. C., County Seat of DUPLXN COUNTY I Editorial, business office and planting plant, ftenansviile, }f. t. WUTitP.QteD? RUTH P. GRADY, EDITOR tittttttJ At ltd ?Hit*, lUbMsMe, H. C. mt glyiiitlil |i|aaa ?iiMtl## Hi U"fi ^^^BbLEPfMfTlMfiUliMMild, IMp 29 ?-PlTl?Might 29 6-2141 ? $550 per year plus 17c N. C. Saks Tan elsewhere. Ufrfrftisinir f|| i|i 1 m 11 aii t%t\ U Deport* fA Are Insured Te $10,000 I %f fedfcAl Deposit 1 nsurance (fcrporatton I ? ? xPIT&itfl Min History 1 i Um tor Sflftomkcr U, 1M(T; *'''?? ? MM. ?M.HM. 0.n?l. t7 ttmm* D.t.il.mM luitMl PMlm ?. * rgy-a?,jitius? M7.a??g5gga ^tvrsa 9 uiotw >PM?U. controlT One way of solving*the difficulty U to deny that there i*T any evil. Thla won't wash ... mm of one kind or another, and ?idplally ain, ia too tall cm) terri ble to be laughed off or ignonsd./ Talfc aboet Cod being hard to be ? llwo hi t is leas of a strain, b? fST, to brieve in a God morf howerfgl than evil, than to believi . HMt evil u no more than, a king Wtt'etiSBtiSU ?Se wor!d"lsMKugS ho aa baser aa bines." thet'aw the doctrine of providence. uSB world is full of a number of.OMB BUhapp^pebaveto.beaftftl , hi God through our tears, not pifr tend tbete'a nothing to cry abotm Fraodan Is rtal , V.. & t'M Some people push the doctrtt* ot Providence too tami TbtjT li* 6ft?l of ctJSj B^^rssrii mS^tJSSS RRSi c?r^?>?W tf Wt eomethtng 8^ fw wiiy ijij\ MNMH jt ?. jjf PV ffeSfcf f| ifr* 5-,-v ? ^ VII V9 kf>4^ f''^'.^r- ,3M. ?J* i.i.i . u!r> the family farm wfflf'^fLOjao * M worth of animal sales, ac?ori
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1963, edition 1
8
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